Cards. »Tw. QUEEN, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, Emporium, Pa. A bnsfnessrelatingto estate,collections, real a»tates. Orphan's Court and generaiiaw huslnfM arlllreceWe promptattentiou. J. C. Johnson. J. P. MoN«»»n IOHNHON & MoNARNEY. ATTORNEY»-AT-LAW Emporium, P*. Will give prompt attention to all busl u. ss ea) rnstedtothem. 18-1 jr. if IOH A ELBEENN AN, ATTORNEY-AT-I«AW Collections prompt l.v attended to. Ileal estatt and pension claim agent, 85-ly. Emporium, Pa. iTHOM Ari WADDINQTON. Emporium, Pa., CONTRACTOR FOR MAISONBY AND STONE-CUTTING. All order* In my lino promptly n«oute; 8232 M Ba , 740 540 p - M - 10 58 Ar Cross Fork Junction Lv 739 209 423 545 210 ! 11 00 Lv. Cross Fork Junction Ar. 7is aOO 355 635 3 00' 111 50 Ar. Cross Fork, Pa. Lv. 615 1»J 805 824 624 P.M. A.M. 1139 Ar Wharton Lv.< 653 1 2e| 310 8 05 11 40 Lv Wharton Ar to 53 3 oo A.M. 858 100 Ar Sinnamahoninx Lv 955 I 140 8 45' 643 800 11 58 Lv Austin Ar 6 351 105 950 8 00| 710 845 12 25 Ar Keating Summit L» 12 40 i 9 loi 7 30i P. M. p. M. A. M. | A. M 1 P. M.j A. M. P. St.' A. M. P. M. j P.M. A.M. 820 935 I " v Ansonia Ar A jj *1 *7 «d! 835 9 49, i - en 905 6 44, 1 839 953 South Gaines, „ s ; 842 955 ,- Gaines Junction 8 59! 638, 855 10 09 Ar Galeton Lv g45 6 . a P.M. A.*.' _ A.M. P.M. P. M. A. M. r . , , p. M. 1 | ,105 6 30, 2, ~t oD Ar 10 10 459 > 124 647 V" I 951 439 I j 150 713 w , fi n d Junction 927 4 „ I 206 7 30. ft Bingham, 909 4 01 I 218 7 41, Genesee j 858 3 52 . | 224 746 V* w nf,? V ' 853 347 j 246 8 o<> Welisville Lv g39 3 30 I [ A. M.i P. M. CONNECTIONS. At Keating Summit with B. h. A. V. Div. of Pennsylvania R. R. At Ansonia with N.Y.C.& II ft. R. for all points north and south. At Newfield Junction with C. « 10 *0 17' 1 20 Seven Bridges *3 l"> . •« '2l »1 'M Raymonds's, i '7 00 "6 30 188 Gold, | 705 6 3ti 111 Newlield 14.) Newlield Junction, 737 145 150 Perkins *7 40 to 48 *1 53 Carpenter's, 7 40 0,1 "1 57 Crowell'a, 7 50 »f> 53 *2 01 Ulysses, Ar 8 051 705 210 I A.M. j j P. I#. WESTWARD. r i i ® i 8 1 STATIONS. A. M. P. M. A. M Ulysses Lv. 7 20 225 9 10 Crowell's, »7 27 *2 82 • 9 19 Carpenter's, 00 *2 34 • 9 22' Perkins *7 32 *2 37 * 9'20 .... NewfieldlJunction 737 242 932 Newlield »7 41 2 'Hi 011 ..... Gold 7 41 '2 49 940 Raymond's «7 49 2 54 * 9 471 Seven Bridges, *8 01 *3 0B *lO o'2 ~ Colesburg »8 04 3 09 *lO 10 Frink's, *8 12 *3 17 *lO 201 North Coudersport, °° *3'26 *lO 35 .... I Ar. 8 25 3 30 10 451 Coudersport, < p. M.I ( Lv. 828 600 120 Hammonds 30 00 O,J Olmsted, »8 33 •« 05 *1 31 Mina, 837 «10 137 Knowlton's, 00 •« 171 00 Be ilette :8 47 821 151 Burtville 854 fi ?* 201 Coleman 00 *8 31 00 I POll Allegany, i 908 840 2 251 (*) Flag stations. (°°) Trains do not stop ♦ > Telegraph offices. Train Nos. 3 and 10 will carry passengers. Tains 8 and 10 do. Trains run on Eastern Standard Time. Connections—At Ulysses with Fall Brook R'y for points north and south. At B. &S. Junc tion with Buffalo & Susquehanna B. R. north for Wellsville, south for Galeton and Ansonia. At Port Allegany with W. N. Y. ,t P. it. R., north for Buffalo, Olean, Bradford and Smethport; south for Keating Summit, Austin, Emporium and Penn'a li. R., poirts. B. A. McCLUBE Gen'lSupt. Coudersport, Pa. The Place to Boy Cheap S > J. F. PARSONS' ? llotScl ESyspepsia Digests what you eat. Foley's Kidney Cure makes kidneys end bladder right. ' g A ri WE R SALVE I mo*-* h««iing salve in the world- CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSIAY, SEPTEMBER 8, 1904. TRAINS COLLIDE A RAILWAY HORROR AT RICH- : MOND, QUEBEC. Cars Telescoped and Locomotives De. molished—Nine People Killed and Twenty-three Injured Montreal, Sept. I.—Nine people were killed and 21! others Injured in a I head-on collision on the Grand Trunk j railway near Richmond, Que., yester- | day. The trains involved were a »pe- \ cial excursion from Montreal bound for Sherbrooke and passenger train j No. 5, running between Island Pond, ! Vt., and Montreal. The collision, it is \ claimed, was due to neglect of orders on the part of the train crew of the j excursion train, which left Richmond without awaiting the arrival of the passenger train. The excursion train was running as the first section of the regular Grand Trunk Portland express, which usu- ; ally crosses the Island Pond train at Richmond and was running on its 1 time. This makes it all the more in explicable why Conductor Atkinson, in charge of the excursion train, did not wait to make the usual crossing. Atkinson disappeared shortly after the wreck occurred. The excursion train, made up of ten coaches and a baggage car, carried about 1,000 persons bound for the ex- j hibition at Sherbrooke. The Island Pond train was composed of five coaches and a baggage car and had only a small number of passengers, j The excursion train had barely clear- \ ed the Richmond yard when on rounding a curve it met the Island Pond train running at a high rate of apoed. Both engineers reversed and with their firemen Jumped, escaping with minor injuries. The shock of the collision was plainly heard in Rich- , ruond, more than a mile away. Both engines were locked together. The baggage car of the excursion train was picked up and dropped on top of the car following it, a smoker, j and it was in these two cars that the • greater number of fatalities occurred. Among the killed is J. B. Blanchet, who was elected to represent St. Hya cinthe in the Canadian house of com mons last spring. FOR CONTEMPT OF COURT. The Retail Druggists' Association Is Fined $2,000 and Its Secretary SSOO. Chicago, Sept. 1. —Twenty-five hun dred retail druggists in the United States were yesterday declared guilty of contempt of court by Judge Dunne, i of the circuit court, and the National Association of Retail Drug)- *■ s, of which they are members, was fined $2,000, while Thomas V. Wooten, sec retary of the organization, was fined SSOO. The cases against five whole sale druggists of Chicago, also charg- j ed with contempt, were continued un- ! till the fall term of court, when it will be necessary for them to take ad- ' ditional proof into court to purge them of the contempt charges. The injunction under which the Druggists' association was fined was secured by Isaac Piatt, a retail drug- j gist of Chicago, in November, 1902, i and restrained them from interfering in any manner with the securing of supplies by Piatt, who had incurred the association's displeasure because j he would not join it. "Piatt has been deprived of the ' right in this community to sell goods," ; Judge Dunne said in rendering li's de- ; cision. "Nothing can be more ciear. j It is a combination that has prevented him from Becuring supplies and the court enjoined the defendants in this | case from carrying out their plan to i prevent Piatt from obtaining goods." | Piatt charges that he has been I blacklisted and boycotted by the asso- j ciation and that through its influence J all the wholesale houses in Chicago ! have refused to sell him supplies. The j association mado its defence upon the j plea that Piatt was attempting to sell | the goods at wholesale, thus cutting the prices. Piatt has fought the asso ciation for two years in the courts. A Successful Holdup. Cheyenne, Wyo., Sept. 1. —Upon the arrival of the Oregon express on the Oregon Short Line at Kemmerer, Wyo., at 2 o'clock Wednesday morn ing, four men stepped out from the shadow of a birilding near the depot and as soon as the door of the express car was opened by the messenger, two of them forced the messenger to throw up his hands, while tho two oth ers took charge of the station agent. A package containing S9OO which had been sent to pay off the employes of the Kemmerer Coal Co. was taken. A package containing $13,000 was not disturbed. Report of Slocum Relief Committee. New York, Sept. 1. —The report of the committee for relief of survivors of tho General Slocum disaster shows that 958 bodies have been recovered and that $109,543 was collected and expended. Of 590 families who lost one or more members by the disaster 437 received aid and provision was made for the permanent care of many of these. Twenty thousand dollars has been put aside for this purpose. One hundred and twenty men lost their entire families in tho disaster and in 12 families 27 children were left orphans. Masked Man Shot at a Woman. Danbury, Conn., Sept. 1. —Miss F. F. Spencer, whose father was robbed of $5,000 by highwaymen two weeks ago, was tho victim of a murderous assault near her home yesterday. The family received letters warning them that they would be killed if further efforts were made to capture the assailants. Yesterday a masked man fired three shots at Miss Spencer as she was I driving. One of the shots set her j dress on fire. She returned the shots j and her assailant fled. Bloodhounds j have been solicited to aid in the j I search for the assailants. FAIVHUS OLYMPIC GAMES. Athletes jf Foreign Nations Meet Those torn America at St. Louis. I SI. Lous, Aug. 31. —The Olympic : Marathon race, the third foot race contest olthe kind ever held and tha first everheld on American soil, par ! ticipatcd n by "1 men classed among j tin' fleete| runners of the world, was won yesterday by Thomas J. Hicks, of Cambridge .Mass., who is the first Americauto win this event celebrated iti the r<"ival of Olympic games. St. Loub, Sept. I.—Again have the j athletes ompeting in the track and | field evens of the Louisiana Purchase expositioi revival of the Olympic I games demonstrated that they are the | peers of any previous aggregation of j internatiqjal character. H. L. lillman, of the New York : Athletic club, ran the 400-meter 1 hurdle n 3 2-fi seconds under the Olympic ind world's record. The 20-meter run brought out a field of ncord breakers. Archie Hahn, j of the Mlwaukee A. C., won the first heat in tie record time of 22 1-5 sec onds. Hi fought the distance with W. J. Cartmsll, of Louisville, Ky., and i only won by inches. The second heat was a trfle slower, but Hogenson was not pushid. The final (the distance by Amercan measurement of the 200 meters feing 2:18.73 yards) resulted j in tho lowering of the Olympic record j by threefifths of a second, liahn won ; i the eveit. Perichs Kakousis, of Athens, | Greece, had everything his own way j in liftinf the bar bell. Kakotsis then went after the Olym- | pic reco-d, which is also regarded as j ihe world's record. He first lifted 200 | pounds and then had the weight ad- ! justed t> 246 pounds, four ounces j ! more tlun the record made by the I Danish sthlete, V. Jensen, at the Ath ens Olynplad in 1596. His first at tempt wis successful. Ralph W. Rose, of the Chicago Ath letic association, played ducks and drakes vith the records in the IG pound shot put. His first essay buried the Olynpic record and came within two inches of the world's record. He tried twice more before he succeeded in smasiing the latter with a put of i I 18 feet 7 inches. International tug of war, teams of j five men, weight unlimited. Milwau- ! kce A. ('. defeated the Boer team. St. j Louis team No. 2 defeated the Pan- Hellenic Athletic club, of Athens, , Greece. Milwaukee defeated St. Louis ; team No. 1. The New York A. C. team defeated St. Louis team No. 2. St. Louis, Sept. 2. —American ath letes lit Id the center of the stage yes terday in the Olympic games and to their pluck belongs the credit for cre ating one world's record and three Olympic records. One of the greatest races was the 800-meter run. The distance in Amer ican measure is 874.89 yards. Entered j in the race were representatives of j the United States, Germany, Canada and New Zealand, but the first four | places were claimed by men running uuder the colors of .Chicago, New York and Milwaukee athletic clubs. Not only did James D. Lightbody, of the Chicago Athletic association, lower the Olympic record by 5 2-5 sec onds, but he ran the legs off the Ger man representative, who collapsed at the finish. The discus throw attracted little at tention until the announcers called the result of M. J. Sheridan's first throw. It came within a few inches of equalling the world's record, mado by himself, of 127 feet 9% inches. When Sheridan again stepped into the seven-foot ring the crowd awaited almost breathlessly while the steel discus whirled through the air. The measurers raced to the spot where the discus had buried itself 130 feet 9 inches from the starting point. The result of the measurement was j greeted with cheers, but the demon stration was as nothing to that which followed the next throw, 132 feet even. The result of the SG-pound event proved a disappointment. It was ex pected that Flanagan, of the Greater New York Irish Athletic association, would break the Olympic record and possibly the world's record. The New Yorker was bested by a foot by E. Desmarteau, of Montreal, Canada. The latter's best throw was 84 feet 4 inches, SUICIDED IN JAIL. Man Arrested in Connection with the Theft from a Cathedral of a Price less Cope Ends His Existence. Ascoli, Italy, Aug. 30. —Tho photo grapher Rocchiggiani, who was ar rested on August 17 in connection with the theft from the cathedral of Ascoli of a priceless cope which was afterwards bought by J. Pierpont Mor gan, of New York, committed suicide Monday by hanging himself to a bar in his cell. He had refused nourish ment for several days. The cope, which was very ancient and considered priceless, was stolen from the cathedral in 1902. It mys teriously disappeared while repairs were being made to the cathedral, and though the government took measures for its recovery, the efforts were un successful. One Hundred People Cremated. Manila, Aug. 30. —Tho city of Bi nang, in Laguna province, island of Luzon, has been destroyed by fire. One hundred persons perished in the flames and 5,000 were rendered home less. The loss is estimated at $200,000. The government is furnishing shelter and food to the people made destitute by the fire. Parker's Successor Is Appointed. New York, Sept. 2.—Judge Edgar M. Cullen, of Brooklyn, was yesterday appointed chief judge of the court of appeals by Gov. Qdell, succeeding Judge Alton B. Parker, resigned. Judge Cullen is a democrat and is now serving as an additional judge of the court of appeals, a position to which he was designated by Roosevelt when he was governor of New York. It has been settled by the republican man agers that Judge Cullen will be nomi nated by the republican party for the position to which he was yesterday appointed. I LOOK ELSEWHERE SSSr | S3O Bedroom Suits, solid (TOC S4O Sideboard, quartered ffOfi oak at «DZ3 oak sOOU W & §2B Bedroom Suits, solid <£o| $32 Sideboard, quartered tfOC U oak at I oak 4>/0 "J $25 Bedroom Suits, solid S2O $22 Sideboard, quartered ..sl6 % '2, A largo line of Dressers from Chiffioniers of all kinds and V. vv §8 up. prices. W A large and elegant line ofTnfted and Drop-head p Couches. Beauties and at bargain prices. $ Jvl The finest line of Sewing Machines on the market, A rf the "Domestic" and "Eldredge". All drop heads and W ft warranted. q_ Y? A fine line of Dishes, common grade and China, in ft sets and by the piece. ft fr, As I keep a full line of everything that goes to make a | up a good Furniture store, it is useless to enumerate them W sall$ all - a* |J Please call and see for yourself that I am telling you .0, the tiuth, and if you don't buy, there is no harm done, as JJ t 112 it is no trouble to show goods. | GEO. J. LaBAR. I r! # )j| Balcom & Lloyd. 3 i | 1 Prepared | | for I i the Sedjot? I [| We have opened and are displaying a ll |= choice line of . . i | FANCY 1 1 DRY GOODS | ill ® fjj specially selected for the . . | | _ Summer a I # Season. | m jl m We have gathered such articles as | [ r combine elegance with 1 and utility at |j I Very Reasonable I If T > * P Trices 112 | P 1 Balcom & Lloyd. | 3